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Sunday, 19 June 2016

THE BATTLE OF OAKMONT: THE US OPEN AND DUSTIN JOHNSON


Oakmont: that’s where I am off to next in my golf ramblings.  If you are not familiar with that name and what’s happening on the surface of this little slice of the planet, stop reading now.  You are not in love with the game of golf.  Be gone…pretty please because I was brought up to be polite.


My heart wants Rory to win.  He’s from my home turf and knows his shamrocks from his clovers.  He’s at home on the forty shades of greens (Thank you, Johnny Cash, for this earworm song that has haunted my young life and still drives me nuts) but, somehow, his putting is reminiscent of the erratic weather-scape of the Emerald Isle– sashaying swings from sunshine to belligerent rains in any hour of any day.  If you believe in prayer, it’s time to send one up to St Jude who is the dual patron of hopeless cases and – wait for it – golfers.  Give it a go but be warned: Rory did not perform well in his most recent outing at – wait for it again – St Jude Classic!


I’m rather warming to the Dustinator, aka Dustin Johnson.  He’s looking smoother these days in his approach to his game.  Nobody ever doubted his ability to drive but his putting has been way too short for his level of game and enough to drive a golf fan to distraction.  So I got just a little excited when I saw him “up there” in the lead crowd and I was gracious enough to recall how great he was at Chambers Bay US Open last year when he nearly won.  That’s when I remembered my late dad’s words “Nearly never did it” and I was back in the bunker of lost hope.  St Jude isn’t to be found there either.  Please give it your best putt this time round, DJ, and here’s a positive thought to carry you through - St Jude’s attribute is a club.  I don’t know if that’s a driver, iron or putter but I want you to play and pray “St Jude for the putt”.


Justin Rose: who could forget that stunning little four-iron number on the difficult 18th at Merion to set up a par four and his tear-filled eyes when he looked to the skies to salute his late father, Ken, in the final round of the 2013 US Open after tapping in his final putt?  While Rory has my heart, Justin has my head.  Commonsense says this great player is deserving of the win and he represents for me everything that symbolises my adopted home in this England’s green and verdant land.  Now, Justin, get this: here’s a little song to carry in your heart.  I’m sure you know the lyrics and the tune.
“So let it out and let it swing, hey Jude, begin
You’re waiting for someone to perform with
And don’t you know that it’s just you, hey Jude, you’ll do
The movement you need is in your shoulders”
The avid Beatles’ fan will have noticed my minor poetic licence adjustments to this song.  Go Justin.


Enough of previews and analysis for now.  Everyone’s at it and it’s largely smoke and mirrors, and if St Jude already knows what the future few days hold in terms of a winner, he is keeping schtum on this.  I just wouldn’t like to be in St Jude’s sandals if all of the above-named decide to pray to him at once.  That would put St Jude in hopeless-case hell should he have to decide between them - and here’s the rub: would he pray to himself?


As I watched Oakmont, I was reminded of Ireland.  Not that the scenery is close on Ireland’s rock and emerald landscape but the weather caught my attention.  It was raining in buckets, or stair rods or cats and dogs, and the whole shebang on the first day of the US Open was not so much a tournament as a tournamental washout.  I was glad I wasn’t there.  My pride and joy of straightened hair takes me hours to prepare and, one drop of rain later, it’s way past knotted-frizz tumbleweed look.  Rory has my sympathy.  Very shortly, he will be right up to his neck in wrinkled curls no matter how short his back and sides were when he first teed off.


The sun came out to play on the second day and so did the players.  That’s when I really saw the course in the raw.  The greens had dried to rolling-on-glass consistency and those tight narrow fairways looked like they positively flowed.  Here at Oakmont, the look is hostile.  Those bunkers and the neatly lined-up Church Pews look like they were designed for trench warfare and that’s exactly what you’re engaged in should you happen to waft your ball into these sand traps. Oakmont is surprisingly devoid of water hazards, has no forced carries, is high on naturally sloping fairways that end in devilish greens, and replete with bunkers. I love the rotund potbellied ones; they look like giant pudding basins and they’re possessed of the sort of roundness that makes you want to go “Boo!” as you pop your head out on an unsuspecting passing golfer in the style of “Kilroy was here”.  Don’t do it please.  The Church Pews are something else – a cantankerous cathedral of alternating sands and strips of rough.  This was a fiefdom – a Fownes fiefdom reflecting the steely mettle of its Pittsburgh-based founder.


The back end of day two ran into the front end of day three because of the deluge on day one.  It was an exciting day and DJ obviously followed my advice, Justin and Rory didn’t, and one whom I had never heard of before, young Andrew Landry, gave it his all.  In three days which saw the 624th ranked player come into his own, Landry birdied Oakmont’s short par-4 seventeenth on Sunday morning – darkness having stopped Day 3’s continuing catch-up play - and then made a sublimely long and curling putt for birdie on the eighteenth.  With that final birdie, he knocked Dustin out of the final pairing with Shane Lowry who had kept Ireland’s hope alive when Rory failed to make the cut.  I am sure the big man from Offaly has a hold of the inside track to St Jude should he need to dial it up: that –and a great short game – makes him an inspirational player.


In the UK, we all got a touch on “excited” when Westwood winged his way into contention but our hopes waned with the dying of the light on Day 3 which saw his unrelenting hand back of all his hard earned points.  And the slow bleed of those points reached haemorrhage proportions during Day 4.  Westwood started the final round five shots off the lead but dropped eight shots on his front nine and crashed out of contention.  Goodbye, Lee.  Time to join Justin.


And so began the final round with several golfing warriors in the mix for their first maiden major.  No wonder Jude and his club were keeping a low profile.  The saint had a peep into the future and took a quick and quiet swing out of the picture.  The beginning was ruled by a sustained Lowry lead and I was cheering my countryman on but, all the while, Dustin Johnson was making a fighting return and was faring well until the fifth.  That’s when he took a few practice putts close to the ball but had not officially addressed it.  The ball moved, Dustin declared it, Lee Westwood, as his paired partner for the round, verified that DJ had not touched the ball, and the official checked and declared, “Play the ball as it lies”.  Dustin did but was informed later, on the twelfth, that he might, or might not, be penalised a one shot.  All the while, play continued and nobody knew what his lead was.  This is top totty controversy and affected everyone’s play.  Sorry, Shane, but at this point I switched allegiance and rooted for The Dustinator as he swallowed his bitter medicine, set his house in order, re-grouped and took the trophy home.  Oh yes, the USGA penalised him a point but Dustin delivered by a wide enough margin to take the cup anyway.


Right now, the USGA have not given full disclosure on their ruling.  Perhaps they are off in the Church Pews praying to St Jude because, to amateur and pros alike, and to quote another Johnson – Boris to be exact – their ruling seemed close to an attempt on their part to make cucumbers out of moonbeams.



Next stop: The Open at Troon.

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